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Grinstein 824.
The standard discussion of Freud's self-analysis.
Melds suggestion theory à la the Nancy School with psychoanalysis. Contains many case discussions.
Translated into English in 1923.
Brandell was Professor of the History of Literature at Uppsala University.
Grinstein 5394.
Sections on language & myth, the prebiographical unconscious, the exigencies of the prebiographical unconscious, the hypothesis of the mental and psychosomatic genesis of cancer. Analyzed by Charles Odier, then by Laforgue, Choisy started in 1946 the journal Psyché: revue internationale de psychanalyse et des sciences de l'homme, which "was intent on being open to all problems of the contemporary world. It was part of a revisionist effort regarding Freud's teachings, of an occultist, meditative, or Orientalist tendency, through which a rather diffuse fidelity to the ieals of the Roman Catholic Church was affirmed" [Roudinesco p.192]. Though known in the Anglo-American world only for her books on Freud and prostitution, she wrote a wide variety of books: novels, poetry, essays, belles lettres, pedagogy, psychoanalysis, reportage.
Grinstein #6383 (omitting the 2nd edition). The first large scale attempt in French to explicate Freudian psychoanalysis.
The 1980 University of Chicago Press edition was translated from this French edition back into English.
Grinstein 10655.
Contains: I. Au dela du principe du plaisir. (Beyond the Pleasure Principle). II. Psychologie collective et analyse du moi (Group Psychology …). III. Le Moi et le soi. (Ego & the Id). IV. Considérations actuelles sur la guerre et sur la mort (Reflections on War & Death). V. Contribution a l'histoire du mouvement psychanalytique (Hist. of the Psychoanalytic Movement).
Grinstein 10710; contains Grinsteins nos. 10427, 10435, 10464, 10496, 10538, 10539, 10540, 10544, 10595, 10604, 10605, 10621.
Grinstein, Sigmund Freud's Writings #125, with incorrect pagination (French translation apparently not in Grinstein's Index to Psychoanalytic Writings). Unsurprisingly, not in OCLC. Both the German and French versions of the second part of the paper appeared in no. 32 of Scientia.So far as we can determine, this is the first translation of a psychoanalytic text of Freud's into French. It is not, however, the first appearance of Freud in French, as it is preceded by the several psychopathological papers he published in French in the mid-1890s.
One of Freud's greatest books and a lasting contribution to the psychology of humor.
Grinstein 10585.
OCLC records 6 copies: Harvard, Ottawa, Montreal, NLM, Woodstock Theol. Ctr, & Atlantic School of Theol.
Contributions by Minkowski, Pichon, de Saussure, Hesnard, Loewenstein, et al.
With an added 8 page postface by Kreisler for the third edition.
Only a handful of libraries have any of the volumes. The first two volumes of a five volume series on neurosis by this Montreal psychoanalyst and psychiatrist.
Laforgue's first book.
Laumonier was In Professor at l'École de Psychooogie de Paris.
Grinstein 22924. Jankélévitch's introduction is a 40 page essay on les éléments romantiques de la psychologie freudienne.
Grinstein 22924.
Includes papers by Chasseguet-Smirgel and Lebovici.
Not in Grinstein. A lecture given May 5th, 1947 at a conference of the Faculté de Médecine de Lyon.
Mostly devoted to sexuality with papers by Nicole Loraux, Paul-Laurent Assount, Sylvie Gribinski, ean-Claude Emperaire, Karima Dekhhli, Michel Panoff, Joyce McDougall, Robert Stoller, Didier Anzieu, J. O. Wisdom, Radmila Zygouris, Christopher Bollas, Patrick Lacoste, Jean-Michel Hirt, and Jean-Claude Lavie.
Papers by Starobinski, Grinstein, Anzieu, Ella Sharpe, André Green, Isakower, Bertram Lewin, Pontalis, Rosolato, Khan, et al. on dreams.
Grinstein 24623.
A complete run of the first 10 years, running from November 1946 to October 1955.
Founded by Choisy (who had been analyzed first by Charles Odier then by Lagache), Psyché "was intent on being open to all problems of the contemporary world. It was part of a revisionist effort regarding Freud's teachings, of an occultist, meditative, or Orientalist tendency, through which a rather diffuse fidelity to the ideals of the Roman Catholic Church was affirmed" [Roudinesco. Jacques Lacan et Co. p.192].
Grinstein 26508.
The first "Rankian" text, which prefigured Rank's break with Freud and in which he stressed the child's earliest relationship to its mother, playing down the importance of the later oedipal conflict.
Rosolato's first book.
Contains selected correspondence of Freud, Meyer, and Ellis relating to the analysis.